
From Flowcharts to Freedom: What a Nobel Peace Prize Winner Teaches About Industrial and Systems Engineering
When the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize went to María Corina Machado, many were surprised to learn that the Venezuelan opposition leader was trained not in politics — but in industrial engineering. Her degree taught her to analyze systems, identify inefficiencies and design solutions — skills she later applied to democratic reform.
Machado’s journey demonstrates the wide-reaching power of industrial and systems engineering. The same discipline that improves production lines and supply chains can also strengthen healthcare delivery, streamline global logistics, and even inform political change.
At the University of Louisville, the online Master of Science in Industrial and Systems Engineering equips professionals to apply systems thinking across industries — from manufacturing and data analytics to healthcare operations and human-factors engineering.
Career paths for graduates include:
- Operations or Systems Engineer
- Supply Chain or Logistics Manager
- Process Improvement or Quality Engineer
- Data and Analytics Specialist
- Industrial Project Manager
- Healthcare Systems Analyst
The program’s flexible online format lets you earn your degree while working full-time, with faculty recognized nationally for research and innovation.
Machado once said that democracy is an engineering project — a system requiring maintenance, data, and human calibration. In the same way, industrial and systems engineers at UofL learn to engineer better outcomes — for industries, communities, and the world.
Applications for the Spring 2026 term are due November 15.
Apply Now.